Disclosing Individual Genetic Results to Research Participants
Top Cited Papers
- 1 December 2006
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in American Journal of Bioethics
- Vol. 6 (6), 8-17
- https://doi.org/10.1080/15265160600934772
Abstract
Investigators and institutional review boards should integrate plans about the appropriate disclosure of individual genetic results when designing research studies. The ethical principles of beneficence, respect, reciprocity, and justice provide justification for routinely offering certain results to research participants. We propose a result-evaluation approach that assesses the expected information and the context of the study in order to decide whether results should be offered. According to this approach, the analytic validity and the clinical utility of a specific result determine whether it should be offered routinely. Different results may therefore require different decisions even within the same study. We argue that the threshold of clinical utility for disclosing a result in a research study should be lower than the threshold used for clinical use of the same result. The personal meaning of a result provides additional criteria for evaluation. Finally, the context of the study allows for a more nuanced analysis by addressing the investigators' capabilities for appropriate disclosure, participants' alternative access to the result, and their relationship with the investigators. This analysis shows that the same result may require different decisions in different contexts.Keywords
This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- Reporting genetic results in research studies: Summary and recommendations of an NHLBI working groupAmerican Journal of Medical Genetics Part A, 2006
- Disclosing Individual Results of Clinical ResearchJAMA, 2005
- Research in human genetics: the tension between doing no harm and personal autonomyClinical Genetics, 2004
- Translating emerging research on the genetics of smoking into clinical practice: Ethical and social considerationsNicotine & Tobacco Research, 2004
- Genetic Research Involving Human Biological Materials: A Need to Tailor Consent FormsIRB: Ethics & Human Research, 2004
- Considerations and costs of disclosing study findings to research participantsCMAJ : Canadian Medical Association Journal, 2004
- A vision for the future of genomics researchNature, 2003
- A Gene-Expression Signature as a Predictor of Survival in Breast CancerNew England Journal of Medicine, 2002
- Apolipoprotein E Genetic Variation and Alzheimer’s DiseaseDementia and Geriatric Cognitive Disorders, 1999
- Ethical issues in the communication of resultsJournal of Clinical Epidemiology, 1991